Thursday, October 31, 2013

Here, I erode in the flames under the immeasurable inky sky. I desperately try to walk away, but clay sticks to my feet, and a sheet of dense fog covers me. Pebbles weigh
down the edges -I bend down, to release myself,I search for them, but they
are always out of reach.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Last week I received a phone call, and I was presented with a challenge: would I exhibit my jewelry in Bømlo Kunstlag's (Bømlo Art Association) Christmas Exhibition during the last 1,5 weeks of November?

Wow - I have very little stock, but it was such a great challenge, so I said YES !

So for the next 3 weeks I'll be living in my studio, doing what I love: create jewelry.

This was indeed the nudge I needed.

It feels good to be back in the studio. It feels good to know that creativity and the techniques are still in my head and in my hands, just waiting for me to let them emerge.

My first new pieces are exercises, to let me reconnect with the metal. They speak to me, and I sense that they will be staying with me.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

I
have been a bona fide born again christian all my life. I was taught to trust and fear God,
love Jesus, believe in the Bible and that Christianity was the only true Way.
God was good, just and almighty, and He kept his eye on me. He was looking for
good and bad, and was always considering whether I was worthy of Him or not. And
for years I thought I was fine with that. But I was in a constant state of bad
conscience with feelings of not being quite good enough, not quite measuring up.

Then
things happened in my life that made me really question what I believed. In
2010 my husband was diagnosed with leukemia, was successfully treated, and has made
it so far. In July 2012 our 29 year old son died.

I
want to emphasize that the following is not a case of “oh, how could this happen to me”, or
“why did this happen to me”. I have always seen that these things
happen to others, so why should they not happen to me some day?

I
was asked/told "isn't is wonderful to have God in your life to help you
through this?" and “the Lord will give you strength”.

These statements made it possible for me to verbalize thoughts I had already had. I discovered that when I really needed him, God was not there. There was
nothing there. It had all been theory, it did not work in real life. Whatever
strength has gotten me through the last 3 years, I have found in myself. God
simply was not there.

I
started thinking that what I had been taught couldn’t possibly be true. I realized
that I had to think things through for myself. I could no longer blindly accept
what I had been told, and ended up having to reevaluate everything I had
believed in so far.

So
I talked to therapists, ministers and friends, and I was challenged to define
my image of god. As it turned out, I had to redefine god totally, and I found
that my traditional god fell apart. I realized I had to get rid of some old baggage for my life to make sense again.

My
studies and thoughts over the last months have led me to this:

I
believe that someone/something, a creator/god, created the universe and all
living things in it. I think two sets of laws were given. Physical laws make the physical universe, including our world, work, and spiritual laws make us divine
beings. I think that the spiritual laws give us resources
that we can bring out, develop and use to get us through whatever life brings.

I
also think it stops there. From there on we are on our own. I no longer believe
in a personal god that interacts with me or with humanity as a whole. We are
each of us responsible for our own lives which we create with our very powerful
thoughts. We, and our thoughts are energy, and the frequency that we radiate to
the universe is equally returned to us. So if we radiate negativity,
negativity is returned. Likewise with love, positivity and gratitude. If we really knew how strong this effect is, we would
never again let a negative thought cross our mind.

I
also think random things happen. Like the fact that I was born in one of the
richest countries in the world, with all the rights and privileges that
involves. It means that my husband could have a million dollar treatment that
didn't cost us a cent. Our son also had all the free medical help he needed. Another point is that my part of the world hardly ever experiences natural
disasters.

It
seems unlikely that some god should be in a position to pick and choose who gets
to be born where, who wins and who loses in this game.

I
can no longer accept that a “loving god” would let random people suffer. Why
would he give me enough to eat and a roof over my head, and at the same time
let thousands of children in another part of the world die from hunger? Why
would he let me get home safely on a dark night, and at the same time let thousands
of other women and girls be raped? Why would he not intervene when atrocities happen
in his name?

The
distribution of good and evil seems to be evenly split in and between christian and
secular circles, so is there really any “power” in the gospel?

Blaming it on free will, evil or god's mysterious ways is just
an easy way to excuse god from any responsibility, if one believes that he is in
charge. When we let our egos take over, evil things happen, but we can not
blame it on some evil being outside ourselves.

It
seems unreasonable to me that a “good god” would condemn anyone to eternal
damnation for not believing or loving him the “right“ way. I don't think we were born deserving a death sentence, nor that we at some point grew into evil beings. I believe we were designed and created acceptable, and stay that way. No alternative plan is needed. I am done with a god that needs to be feared.

Consequently,
when I believe there is no hell, there is also nothing I need to be saved from,
and the whole sin, salvation and reconciliation idea falls to pieces.

I think our purpose on this earth is, among other things, love
and gratitude, for ourselves, those close to us, all mankind, nature and our
environment. This is also the essence of the christian values I have been
taught. But I would be arrogant if I claimed them to be only christian values.
These thoughts are also included in other ancient scriptures, many of which were written down long before the christian bible.

I think the bible was inspired by man's divinity. As I can no
longer believe in a personal god that interacts with us, the bible can not have
been influenced by such a god. But I think that, in addition to a lot of material
that only concerns the time when it was written, it also contains much wisdom,
and that the most important principles it teaches are love, gratitude,
equality, acceptance and forgiveness, and they are good life guidelines.

We live in a universe that has more than 500 billion galaxies, with more that 100 billion solar systems in each one. I think everything was made by the same creator, and that the physical and spiritual laws govern them all.

How likely is it that the creator would choose one area, on one planet, in one solar system, in one galaxy as his favorite place and favorite people? Most likely there are more planets just like ours. To claim that it is not so would be us limiting the Creator.

I find it absurd that we have taken a 4000 year old Bedouin
cult, with the attitudes and traditions that existed then, and turned it into a
guide for life in 2013, and expect it to work!

So
as it turned out, the image I had of God was totally wrong for me, and I
had to change it for my life to make sense. For now, these thoughts work for
me. All our beliefs are interpretations, either our own or someone else’s, and
each of us has to choose what’s right for us.

My
testimony is that I have never felt so free and liberated as I do now! I am rid
of all burdens and striving, and the do's and don'ts in order to be accepted by
the Being who created me. I consider this my spiritual awakening, and I rejoice in it.

Thursday, February 07, 2013

This is where, and how, I spent my afternoon. Me-time. A sprinkling of snow. Sunshine. Water. Sparkling reflections. So restful on the old eyes. And soul. Air completely at rest. In my ears: only the rumble of slow, rolling ocean waves.

A full brie, and coffee. Did I mention sunshine? And my beloved Nikon. Standing on it's own three feet today.

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

Vanessa Sage from Sage Life Consulting put out a challenge. She gave us an age to go back to, and asked us to compare our lives then and now. Here's mine:

I was: 23, in 1976

I lived in: Stavanger, Norway

I was married to: I was not married. I had just met my future husband, although that was not clear to me yet.

I drove: I did not have a driver's license yet, didn't get it until I was 33, so I used public transport, a bike and my feet. To get to classes, I would go with a friend on her tandem bike.

I feared: God. Apparently he was watching every move I made, and constantly debating whether I deserved heaven or hell.

I worked at: I was in college, studying to be a kindergarden teacher.

I wanted to be: probably a kindergarden teacher.

* * * * *

Today I am: 59

I live in: Bømlo, which is an island on the west coast of Norway, half way between Stavanger and Bergen.

I am married to: my best friend, for nearly 32 years. We have a son and a daughter. Our son died last July.

I drive: a grey Peugeot, and a big silver Hymer camper van.

I fear: less and less. I have realized that a god who needs to be feared is not my kind of god.

I work at: at 43 I retrained to be a silversmith, and I have a home studio. I love making jewelry, but for various reasons that part of my life is on hold at the moment. These days I photograph, draw and write.

I want to be: a professional artist. I want to sell more of my jewelry, and also my photos and drawings, and I want to publish a book.